~.‘.\"»&'-`~" . A I Y . - ~ . 5 r \ I ._ _ _ _ . . .,. . _isa -,. ,.\e,,.»r , ‘ I 0* 1 -I » ~ _l` -'.7' .* _ .'. I .' _ _ I I I 1- _I .- “ _ ` THE GUARDIAN COVERS PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND LIKE THE DEW QRTH READING ALL THE ADvTs. WORTH PRINT I..-A1-LTHENEWSAW _ . "‘ " v ` ' _ no _'_ Y, "’P,.°°'*’¢ Piptr ' `c>v¢r 45 ooo' Readers nail A - |--s..¢ b irrorrrareow I =.s~+~- _ .'_ _ V yllynir iSl»"rZ.' '»¥.7.I‘.I'.l!a°ll¥'»’ "" . cHARLoTTeTowN, CANADA. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 191s on P.. Y." <--mr I-._.»......r. cam. .,.-a ,dsqspirp-rf~ _ : 1 - .O50 POI VOIP carl. irirrorir--s rm-uv sun r=orro|rro in-Ein '\`-"-‘-`-" ‘ ' _ -_ _ r. __ ._ » _ _ _ _ I vrt-'\niStrufi|Bt LF id .- A _ . _ . ~ III); which ~th5>~G¢°rm§n‘;";°r'; F;-rail; '[I{'I¢sisIt“iIl':;: Elsewhere Allred Progress is Practically Unrnterrupted and Village . rin_g|n` Their Wo d dt lil _ I 'ith I r .' _ med .dvanm _ ‘|§‘_‘)cR,s. 8uhT£‘k|§f§°M0vef Repelled Further Attacks and Taken More Villages. .» ,_ _ _. M (nent Endangers Lao n and La Fefe. Special to The Guardian) PA-iiriS, Sept. 31.-General Mungin has in" his command some of the fin- est American divisions together with the elite of the French and Colonial troops. The fighting during the past 48 hours has equalled in ferocity any- thing as ‘yet seen during the war, nevertheless the enemy had to give way and the Franco~American forces v have won half the plateau between, the Soissons and Coucy Le Chateau. The Soissons Doucy and the Soissons Anisy Le Chateau roads are threaten- ed an dthe Germans are faced by the danger of the French getting behind Chemin Des Dames in their rear. GERMAN8 TERROR STRCKEN OV. ER AERIAL RAIDS LONDON, Sept. 1.-Despatchee from Holland and Switzerland con- firm the united press interview with a British officer concerning the ef- fectiveness of the aerial raid on Mun- nheirn_ Enormous damage was done in some sections. According to the despatches whole streets were de- vasted. The terror stricken people seemed to he hypnotized and sought no cover which is declared to be res ponsible for the large number of cas- ualties. BERLIN CROWDS TEAR IIAISER ’S -PICTURES Pictures oi War Lords Fiung into Streets and E Trampied Upon by AMSTERDAM, August 31.-A re- markable demonstration is reported to have taken place in Berlin. The report was spread that the military authorities had decided to raise mili- tary age limit. This began the trouble in the poorer quarters, particularly in the Moahit district, for in this district of Berlin, which might be called the Tower Hamlets or Bermandsoy of London, there had circulated the re- port that the upper classes would be released from service. Heard With Anger and Diemsy Reports of the decision were re- ceived with anger and dismay,~ the crowds, mostly women and old men. assembled in the streets and noisilyv discussed the-matter under the eye_ Angry Crowds. , -r...,_ of the police. However. the crowds melted away and the people return ed to their homes or went to cafes But at the latter places the picture: of tho Kaiser, 'Crown Prince Hin- dcnburg' and Lundendorff were taken from the walls and thrown from the windows into the street. For some minutes there was a rain of pictures of Germany’s mili- tary great ones poured from Ber- lin‘s private and public houses. Outdoor people gave vent to their feelings 'by trampling the picture: under foot, and some who lingers' rather too long were arrested. For an hour the street cleaners werl busy sweeping the tatters of thou: ands of gaudy nlecgraphs, a specter le enjoyed by overlookers from man_\ windows in Berlin. PIIIIS EXPEIIISA I SIAMI_BY ENEMY NiIiitrsy`Crltlcs See End of Present Giiiieneivefh Fiiret Sitsge. PARrIS,Aug. 81.-French critics now consider that the allied offensive has reached the- end of a definite stale. lilrost of them think that the Germans. having reached approximately the old 1917 positions will manage -to stay there tempcmsriiy_' for, however batt- ered their old defences, there sttll re- main the wrecks of the old block- hcuses and trench systems, which of- fer appreciable aid. There is an unsheken confidence in v-ictory. however, for the' critics be lieve that if the Germans are allowed to stay in their present- positions it will be only because of allied inactivi- ty. They call attention to the fact that the enemy is so low in resources that he hu been .reduced to the ex- tremity of calling on Austria for help. lt is certain, they say, that as long as the Austrian frontier. is closed tha despatch of Austrian troops -to the western front will continue. Over and-above our gains." says M. Barrel, "cite fnust note that _Germany has lost her offensive power. Further- more, everiedbfence is mode more 0@.__...._._____.;_---0 r ANNOUNUEMENTS. - -comms aviators MnET1Nos,.R'rc. °.°A meeting of the caretakers of |"°* Ranches ana rnarvraurn owners oi ranches will he held st` the rooms Gi the Y. ILC. A. on Thursday Sept. *th st s arcioctr. ny order cr commit- too. _ , ` not-_s-nur. ii.. difficult for the Germans by the seri ous losses they have suffered and bf the poor quality of available reserves Col. Fabry writes: "What is most necessary for us, _lr order to beat the Germans, is to havr a numerous army, skilled not only lr trench warfare -but in the war of movement as vvell.lt is not maseer alone that will decide the battle -for us, -but masses of men who know hovl to fight intelligently. "Our men must .be made familiar* with all -the new engdnes of war, such as tanks and airplanes and all forms o mobile artillery and all kinds of vici- ous shells. The Allies are sure to have the necessary divisions, and ir is only necessary to instruct them Then when this intelligent war me chine is put in motion it will not sto! short of complete victory. “By patient strategy- Marshal Pooh has provoked a crisis in the German empire and -this is -the most irremedi able of all the factors operating I8 ainst -the enemy. Vain is the imperdd Government's appeal to Ailltrtl- ID vein does it put into the ranks half oi the 1920 class. Do those things mot- ter in the face of the wave -upon wave of ardent confident young men pour- ing into Frantic every day from Amer- ililf | ` “Germarny has cause for dejectinn. having lost both the power that goes with numerical superiority and the advantage tlmt goes wlitls the in itiaoive.” gg-5-xii IIIISUIIIIY IISI TORONTO. August 31.-The follow- ing mines appear in todsy’s cssssity un. xiuca in muon, L. rricxeruie. French River. P.- iii. l.: A- M°L°°df Nqrghinedsque. P. li. l.; A. B. Pe't»l‘l» 'Noyon in their eastward advance are, 'is again in the possession of the Brit-“ "ish army. it has been widely wot-lredI0_43_ wodnesdhy M 0_44 ,md f|~|,u1-S, - ..¢ ."1-`_'. _ '. ` _ ___ _ LONDON. .August 31.-The Ger- ly in April io smash rr wary througlr mans intend to iight for the llinden- to Calais and Dunkirk. burg line. At Bullecourt and Hende- ports, hostile counter-attacks deliver- MEL HILL ed with much determination by strong forces compelled our troops There are no signs that the (lor- ‘.o fall back to, the western outskirts mans mean to give up Kcmrncl liill of these and to a German trench sys- and Messirres Ridge voluntarily. The Lem between them where the cnemy's second British army may be under .ittacks were stopped by'our tire. l¢‘or- the necessity' thcre of speeding the ;unately there is a good chance of parting guest. -;urnlng the Bullecourt positions from During 'the first eighteen months of I-he “0l`lh- ' the service of the Canadians in CZANADIAN REPEL A1--|-A¢K’ CAp_ i<‘rance while they held part of the TURE VILLAGE AND Ypres sector, Bailleul and Locre and PR|50NER3 Nouve Eglis ami all the towns round _ about became a second home to them. An attack launched yesterday by in all this district their' dead lie bur- _ianarlinn 1;-gong north of tho rooho ierl and there are memories corrne_ct- tured villages ugh-|09 the A1-1-o,,_(~_11,“_ ed with it that tlrousanrls of Carrad- irni Road, has been 511oooB_.,f11| hhd'inirs will hold sacred as long as they ho German defences houvoon Hondo live. liallleul lrrrs been terribly de- court and Haucpm-¢_ have boon ooo vasted by shell ilrc since April and ured together with me |3111” vmogo even Hazebrock and Cascl have not and several hundred 1,1-|Sone1~s_ Thoiescnped but the people are thrifty Llannrliun from on tho _gomhrm roodInn1l enterprising and will soon have is likely to be he,-cely attached hy the sliop's going again in Bnilluel and he enemy in the hope of roooouhglthe lace workers ‘back in the old fam- he gugcegg at Bmlecoort huh the iliar places There are no braver folk ;r-ormd won at Remy when A1.1o1S|in northern France than the women ind Hsuwurt 15 high com,1s11ng_o1-wlro carried on the mercantile and ln- .hises on both sides of tho _Senseo dustrial life of Bailluel while 'shells ind will give the -Canadian machine “`I“'I“ked °V‘”`h‘3“‘I by day and "Igm gun barrage |11 which they have hooh and bombs were dropped upon their :arefully trained by Colonel Bruttin- I‘°“"e5‘ by “ight- rll, the machine gun expert of the A iorps an opportunity to do effeguvg FIERCE STRUGGLE ON AILETTE work. The setback to thc south will _ FRONT -ir-ove but temporary for in the rog- _ori to the southwest oi’ Bullecourt LONUUN' A“g““t 31~_M”"gI“S 'grmoh troops 111.8 moving oust _,ahhh urrrry is not much heard from but the y 111 tho gohom1oh.ecthm or the Bah battle on the Ailette front has be- mmo (yomhml Romh hsremioourt n come n struggle oI` the utrnost import- ,mhgo olong the mm] has hcon mh_ rrncc :iirrl tho Frciiclr co'ntlriue to m ond Bohgny hhmhm. village which force their' way into wooylng the southern outgk LONDON. Sept. 1.-Mont Kemnrel wood, 500 yards southwest he farrrous stronghold southwest of Le Chateau ln the Lys s Yprcs, which was the scene of teriiflc British hold La Couture and Igllliilg illlflllil the German oi'i’cnsivc and are west of Doulcu at in Flanders into in April. lrzrrulicen Field Marshal Haigs forces) -aplured by thc llritish, according to progressed I mile and hql ulvicos from thc. front. Mount St. Bailleul Br)itish troops lm Quentin, a mile and a. half north of liont De Lile and Kemrpel Perorrne. has been taken by Field British troops wht 1; A g .viarshal ilaig's men. French troops St Quentin are nsw Engviu (Special to The Guardian) Rive d I ' ii a I i E i ll nude a small advance on the Ailette. direction of Bassnu AIIIIIIIIS SIEAI/IEII ers arriving on a British steamer. snr rs Irrrs (Special to The Guardian) ' VLADIVOSTOK, Sept. 1. by the As- sociated -Press.--Entente allied forc- ~s and Czecho -Slovak troops have at- aclrcd the ilolslrcvik red guard on .he Ussuri river' front and have driv- ~n the eucrny barclr for :L dlsturrce of lttccn irillcs, Prisoners were taken rnri booty was cnptur'ed by the Al- led forces. `EIINIIIN IIIIIES I SEVEIIEIY BIIMBEII (Special to The Guardian) ArMSTl<]lbDAlVl‘, rAugust |Zll.-Front- er r-orrcspondent s of the telegraph rsscrt that travellers from Germany 'eport heavy damages from the rec mt air raids in towns along the Rhine. Forty were killed in the last rttock _ On Cologne one entire street in Man- iheirn were laid in waste. At Dlngen ‘he Alien works-were destroyed. sur rorrm nina |>trsrNr§__rrIcr in (Special to The Guardian) OTTAWA, August 31.-Sir Robert Borden today formally handed to llsiiuliiiilrlPEIITIPI2IrIr,nTf _ (Special to The Guardian) GEN AN ATLANTIC PORT, Sept. 1.-A involving 200 000 workm lerrnan submarine disguised with broken ou; at Bochum 1h W ‘nrrvts t`unrrel and stack as a destroy- P;-“|319” sooo,-d1hz to dash" -r reccrrtly shelled a passenger shed he,-9 todo, from Mun steamer 'bound for South America. thousand on-lhoro ho", hee 50 miles off the Virginia const, rain- the from 3000 doooned from rrg shrapnelon her decks for two ion under ooo rours, according to a story brought to ing tho 1o,vh_ 11 1! “id M his port Saturday night by posseng- feared EVA Sept 1-Sex-101) 1 1 ic ll "'<-1%-un-_1>__`,.i, TIIISHEVI IIIIIVEN IIIIIIII] IIANAIIIIIIS AIIIIEPIEIJ iii OTTAWA A 81- rar received here Indicate, derstood that in the neighbu 10 000 msn took advantage oi I clarnation granting gn gn deserters and defaulters Military Service Act These 1 reporicri for service and wi punishment for their failing before WANT SOME SON THAT HINDENBURG il STIL 4 LONDON August 81--Fl shal Von Hindenburg. replyi telegram recently sent tot members of the ah RBICUGHDUPK Bohemia ask some sign that he was alive. to end the rumors that he i I is quoted in an Amsterdam to the Central News as ssyi I am as right as s. trii looking calmly to the future heobobeoooooooe DOOOCQOOOQOOODO iliac.. wi-fel Joseph Storey, Inkorman I Lieut. (lol. rClmmbers, usher of the illuck Rod. thc black rod which is the gift to Canada of the United King- .lorn branch of the Empire Parlia- WANTED CAPAILI Gift general housework A l; mentary association. Sir Robert rec- eived the Black llod while overseas it a gathering attended by the speak- FARM FOR SALI AT acres Apply to M 0 .-rs of boilr houses of the imperial Parliament. The Black Rod replaces the one destroyed in the fire. On it is .1 British Sovereign dated 1914 the year. Col, Chambers assumed ohlce. ll_iU-Xili III IIEIIES NI Il. III AI IIIIITAIIII (Special to The Guardian) OTTAWA, August 31.--Hon. N. W. Rowell, who left for Toronto tonight; the Government on Canadian Day. 'Governor General will also atten i. e “oo od Ah 7 Exposition that day. From Chicago, 011 11 Mr. Rowell will go to Winnipeg and . _ . _ . ‘FOUR MEN BOARUER W Apply at Guardian Oiiics LOST SATUR A ‘ ` tween 171 Dorchester Bt Hg); _,N W Rgwgh ........ ......... . - ' ' - _ lmsthystf and nesris in ell . iirn Finder return to Goya receive reward é 'TO DAIIVMIN-OANVFAR I naw. nuns; 'ms emu'-ssc its Por asf' mr °'ro Ltr A econ srasi. rss s G ter ° -Guardian to speak at i.he Canadian National' Exhibition tomorrow, will represent* Mud," Iuthbh hr n 1 30 Longworp, Ave. 11 Sept, 10th at the Allied war expolii- enopmo Y A ion at Chicago. His Excellency! the wovoim » - I r 4 g. , ' - _ I I ;, _ 11- »-;y".t ~. _ _ __ ii* _ _ _ _' ` _ _tr » -~‘~ ' ' ~ », . _ ___ _ _ _ v __ <_.»,.-"'.=_v_-- r " _ I 4' s I -A ,_ -1' -'-I*rf- -»-.-~~- ,. iz, » 1 lv Regina in connection with his admin- *ONE OR TWO Gilt.. I istraticn duties as heed of the Royal can have *ltd U northwest mounted police brsnih 'of near P W Ctiii the public service. Glariitsn Oloe mr.